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- <text id=94TT1376>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Disasters:The Cruel Sea
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DISASTERS, Page 52
- The Cruel Sea
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Baltic ferry Estonia sinks with the loss of more than 900
- lives
- </p>
- <p>By James O. Jackson/Stockholm--With reporting by Ulla Plon/Copenhagen and Bruce van Voorst/Bonn
- </p>
- <p> Nautical engineers never say a ship is unsinkable--not since
- the Titanic hit an iceberg and went down in 1912. But the disaster
- of the passenger-and-car ferry Estonia last week was surely
- one that should never have happened. The 14-year-old German-built
- vessel was well designed, carefully maintained and as safe as
- modern technology could make it. It carried the required number
- of lifeboats and life jackets. Its engines and equipment were
- deemed in order: it had been thoroughly inspected Sept. 9 and
- again last Tuesday.
- </p>
- <p> Yet hours later, the Estonia rolled over and sank in the stormy
- Baltic Sea. It went down at 12:34 a.m. Wednesday, so quickly
- that only 139 of the 1,051 passengers on board were pulled from
- the water alive. The few who did not drown trapped in the dark
- cabins of the stricken ship died of shock and hypothermia in
- the 50 degrees F water.
- </p>
- <p> It was an especially shocking blow to Estonia and Sweden; nearly
- all of the victims came from these two countries. Their families'
- grief provoked an ugly outpouring of questions about why the
- ship sank so rapidly. Inquiries are also being made about the
- Estonia's basic design, so similar to the scores of other roll-on,
- roll-off vessels with vast, open vehicle decks vulnerable to
- flooding from large loading doors fore and aft. Some analysts
- were suggesting the loss of the Estonia--like that of the
- British ferry Herald of Free Enterprise in the Belgian port
- of Zeebrugge in 1987--means these kinds of vessels may be
- too dangerous for passenger service. There had been little reason
- to fear for the Estonia when it steamed out of Tallinn on Tuesday,
- bound for Stockholm on its thrice-weekly run. Two Swedish inspectors
- noted wear on the rubber seals of the large, watertight bow
- doors but concluded it was not serious enough to require immediate
- repair. The weather on Tuesday was bad--winds gusting to 62
- m.p.h., raising seas as high as 32 ft.--but no worse than
- usual for this time of year. The ride was bumpy enough, however,
- to force the nightclub band to stop playing around 8:30 p.m.
- and to send many passengers to their cabins.
- </p>
- <p> The first sign of trouble appeared shortly after midnight on
- a closed-circuit television monitor in the engine room. One
- of the engineers on watch saw that water was entering the ship
- near the bow doors. Believing it was only rain, the crewmen
- activated the bilge pumps. But within minutes the sea was pouring
- into the lower car deck near the waterline, and the ship began
- rolling heavily onto its left side.
- </p>
- <p> Neeme Kaik, an Estonian passenger, reached a lifeboat station
- as the list increased. "There was no activity among the crew,
- and I did not hear any messages," he said. "I grabbed a life
- jacket, and then the boat fell on its left side completely.
- I managed to jump into a rubber boat with three other people."
- Moments later, the 15,566-ton Estonia turned nearly upside down
- and sank, stern first, in 260 ft. of chilly water. Survivors
- estimated that it had gone down in little more than 15 minutes.
- </p>
- <p> In the water, passengers remember hearing only the roar of the
- storm and faintly, above it, the human cries. "You really heard
- the screams of the women out in the sea," said Hannu Seppanen,
- a Finn. Only those lucky or strong enough to reach the rafts
- had a chance to live.
- </p>
- <p> "When we arrived in the middle of the night," said Jan Thure
- Tornroos, captain of the Finnish ferry Mariella, which was the
- first vessel on the scene, "we could see people floating about
- in the water and hear them screaming for help." The Mariella
- managed to rescue 17. "There were hundreds of bodies bobbing
- up and down," said Hemming Eriksson, a passenger on a second
- ferry that responded to the postmidnight mayday message. "Many
- were dressed only in underwear and life jackets. Some of them
- moved, so you could see they were living, but we could not get
- them up in the heavy sea." Between 4 a.m. and 3 p.m., 21 rescue
- helicopters pulled people from heaving life rafts. Briton Paul
- Barney climbed into one of the rafts with 11 others and held
- on for seven hours. "I just kept myself going because I wanted
- to live," Barney recalled. "But six of those with us died."
- </p>
- <p> Worse by far was the terror and panic inside the ship, as passengers
- fled their cabins and jammed into corridors and stairways. "A
- woman had broken her legs and begged others to give her a life
- jacket," said Kent Harstedt, a Swedish passenger, "but it was
- the law of the jungle." Andrus Maidre, a 19-year-old Estonian
- passenger, said the old and the very young had little chance.
- "Some old people had already given up hope and were just sitting
- there crying," he said. "I stepped over children who were wailing
- and holding onto the railing." Very few of the survivors were
- women, children or the elderly. "There is no law that says women
- and children first," said Roger Kohen, spokesman for the International
- Maritime Organization, based in London. "That is something from
- the age of chivalry." Perhaps there was no time for chivalry
- aboard the Estonia. Many children, mothers and elderly people
- were asleep in cabins deep within the ship. Patrons in the upper-deck
- bars were mainly males. "In the circumstances, it is clear who
- will survive," said Dr. Steffan Torngren, of Stockholm's Soder
- Hospital, where 31 victims were treated. "It would be those
- who are most fit, those who are young, those experienced with
- the sea and the ship."
- </p>
- <p> Maritime officials suspect that some flaw in the Estonia's forward
- loading door--or human error--led to the flooding of the
- car deck. Information indicates that the outer bow door had
- jarred loose and may even have ripped off completely. "There
- are several eyewitnesses who say the bow door was missing when
- the ferry went down," said Bengt Erik Stenmark, Sweden's maritime
- safety director. Investigations into the disaster could result
- in demands for changes to the roughly 4,500 similar ships in
- operation worldwide. Some specialists advocate installing dividers
- in the car decks to check the force of water flowing inside.
- But operators resist such baffles because they would interfere
- with the efficient movement of vehicles.
- </p>
- <p> The Estonia is now lying in water shallow enough to be reached
- by divers and perhaps by salvaging equipment. Maritime experts
- and the ferry's owners agree that raising it would be technically
- difficult. And they acknowledge that it would be dangerous work
- for the divers to bring bodies to the surface. For the hundreds
- who perished inside it, the Estonia has become a tomb.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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